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Freeper Joanie-f review of "The Great Raid" and what we dare not foget from it
FR ^ | 13-Aug-2005 | Joanie-f

Posted on 08/14/2005 6:57:07 PM PDT by Jeff Head

As you probably already know, I am not a movie-goer – only set foot in a theater maybe once or twice a year, if that -- for three reasons: (1) most of the ‘stuff’ that passes for cinematic excellence these days is no more visually or intellectually rewarding than staring at road kill, (2) I cringe at the thought of lining the pockets of the politically-activist Hollywood left, and (3) I’d rather be biking. :)

With that disclaimer out of the way … Rick and I saw the just-released movie ‘The Great Raid’ last night. Knowing the shared love that you and I have for ‘Saving Private Ryan’ and ‘Band of Brothers’, I told myself that I must e-mail you this weekend and alert you to this new ‘greatest generation’ portrayal (so now a post here will do just as well, since you brought up the subject yourself. :)

Before telling you a little about the movie, let me first describe three reactions (two audience, and one personal) that may provide a clue as to its impact:

(1) I generally wear a headband in my hair (it’s long) to keep it out of my face. I took the headband off during the movie and was holding it in my hands. During one of the more emotionally wrenching scenes, I unconsciously broke it in half. :)

(2) The theater was about half full. When the daring POW rescue around which the story centers succeeded, and the American POWs and their rescuers walked/staggered/were carried through the camp gates, the audience erupted in applause and some cheers, accompanied by tears.

(3) When the story had ended, the credits began to roll, accompanied in the background by dozens of black-and-white photos of the actual POW camp survivors, their rescuers, and their welcome home to American soil. Hardly a person in the theater left until the credits and stream of photos were over. And, when we did leave, we all left in silence.

The movie is based on two books: ‘Ghost Soldiers’ (which I have read, and highly recommend) and ‘The Great Raid on Cabanatuan’ (which I intend to read now. :)

It is the story of what is said to be the most successful rescue mission in the history of the American military. It beautifully details how the 6th Ranger Battalion (comprised of an elite group of 121 men), accompanied by a large group of Filipino guerrillas, traveled thirty miles by foot, behind enemy lines (which numbered nearly 30,000 Japanese), in order to rescue the 511 remaining survivors of the Bataan Death March. Word had come back that the Japanese were torturing and brutally murdering American POWs rather than housing them until the end of the war. The plan was to rescue those survivors who represented the mere five percent who endured the unprecedented, sadistically barbaric Bataan march, and then three additional indescribably brutal, gruesome, macabre years in Camp Cabanatuan in the Philippines. Miraculously, 523 Japanese troops were killed or wounded during the raid, yet only two Americans and twenty-one Filipino guerillas were killed in the mission, with two dying afterwards of their wounds.

I won’t go into much more detail about the story (although it is extremely difficult not to want to share some of the more arresting and wrenching scenes) because I hope you will try to see the movie, and because I suspect that you are already painfully aware of the factual account of the brutality of the Bataan Death March, the inhumane conditions in the POW camp, and the details of the rescue itself.

‘The Great Raid’ portrays one extraordinarily moving chapter in the Pacific theater in the same way that ‘Saving Private Ryan’ does regarding D-Day and its aftermath in Europe. As a movie, ‘Saving Private Ryan’ may be somewhat more powerful, but the impact of this movie is significantly enhanced by the fact that it is not a fictional account. And it’s a shame that the magnificence and inspiring success of this raid, in the face of overwhelming odds, were eclipsed by subsequent events such as the liberation of Iwo Jima and the bombing of Hiroshima.

What made the deepest impression on me was the fact that the elite Ranger battalion was ordered on this mission, not because it in any way benefited the Allies in a militarily strategic way. It was simply a mission of mercy – a seemingly impossible, suicidal assignment: to traverse thirty miles, by foot, outnumbered by enemy troops in the area by a ratio of 100:1, and rescue and transport home the last of those who, three years earlier, had been abandoned when Macarthur was ordered to leave the Philippines. The mission was simply to bring home those last remaining 511 men who had endured a hell on earth the likes of which none of us can even imagine, and who had come to believe that their country had abandoned them.

The sadistic tactics of the Japanese army (beginning in one of the very first scenes, in which American POWs were herded into underground air raid shelters, into which gasoline tanks were then rolled and ignited – and any burning POW who ran from the conflagration was gunned down) eerily reminded me of many of the hauntingly brutal scenes in Jeremiah Denton’s Vietnam-era POW saga, ‘When Hell Was in Session’ or ‘The Hanoi Hilton’.

I have been repeating, again and again, here on the forum that I believe that one of the most powerful forces working to bring our republic to her knees is the fact that America arose from Christian roots, but much of the rest of the world doesn't share that foundation or its viewpoints. The genius of our founding fathers, and the grace and generous blessings of God, gave birth to our indispensable national belief that human life is precious, and must be treasured and preserved at all costs. To ignore the fact that that fundamental cultural belief is not shared by much of the rest of the world may one day prove to be the death of us.

We need only look at the brutal human atrocities portrayed in this film … and beyond: to Stalin’s Ukrainian starvation, the Holocaust, the Vietnam POW camps, the killing fields of Cambodia, Mao’s ‘cultural revolution’, North Korea’s purges and concentration camps, genocides in Armenia, Ethiopia, Turkey, Biafra, Rwanda, East Timor, Sudan … ad infinitum.

We need only look at comments such as this one, made recently by a high-ranking member of the Chinese Communist Party:

Whatever the case may be, we can only move forward fearlessly for the sake of our Party and state and our nation’s future, regardless of the hardships we have to face and the sacrifices we have to make. The population, even if more than half dies, can be reproduced. But if the Party falls, everything is gone, and forever gone!

And now, when ‘terrorists’ (such a nebulous term, when so many violent, bloodthirsty splinter groups are included under that massive umbrella) threaten to murder all humans who do not choose to believe as they do … now is the time when we must recognize, and defensively react to, the fact that life is not precious to the rulers of the majority of the global population … and those who knowingly elect to follow them.

Even more disturbing, and equally necessary to acknowledge, is the fact that life is not as precious to those of our countrymen who occupy the far left of the political spectrum as it is to the rest of us. And, because of their lowering of the bar as regards the sanctity of life, they are every bit as much enemies of this republic as are foreign ‘terrorists’.

Our ‘homegrown enemies’ defile life by their acceptance and support of partial birth abortion, convenient euthanasia, and the like.

As recent evidence of the fact that, in the mids of the far left, political power and the furtherance of political ideology places a reverence for life lower on a list of human priorities, consider the number of decisions (both overt and behind-the-scenes) made by our forty-second president, and his cohorts on the Hill and in the courts, that were either treasonous or short-sighted … many of which still put this entire nation and her people at risk. The most recent example of this atrocious behavior is the revelation that Clinton administration lawyers ordered military intelligence officials to keep under wraps, rather than sharing with the FBI, sensitive information they had discovered on Mohamed Atta, the instigator of the 9/11 attacks … and that Clinton and the mainstream media, yet today, are treating this abominable revelation as a non-story, in spite of the fact that that very directive might well have contributed to the loss of 3,000 American lives.

The extreme left also seeks to downplay (at best), or ignore (at worst), the human atrocities committed by our foreign enemies. We are no longer permitted to see photos of beheaded ‘infidels’, hear reports of kidnappings, tortures and mutilations, or re-witness innocent Americans jumping to their deaths from the conflagration that was once the World Trade Center. And the average American has very little, if any, real knowledge of the inconceivably gruesome structures and implements of torture and dismemberment our soldiers have unearthed since our liberation of Iraq. We are shielded from the human-on-human barbarism occurring in so many parts of the world. If you ask the average American ‘In how many countries do you believe torture, genocide and/or slavery are prevalent?’ I would imagine he couldn’t name more than one or two, when, in reality, there are dozens … and growing.

And our ‘homegrown enemies’ strategy is a double-barreled one. In addition to suppressing the fact that our belief in the sanctity of human life is not shared by much of the rest of the world, they also invariably seek out, or manufacture, examples of ‘American barbarism’ in an effort to prove that the wars in which we are involved are prosecuted on a more-or-less level moral playing field.

Just one of the more recent of countless examples: The behaviors of a few mental degenerates (whose incidence probably represents .001% of the population of this country) in the Abu Ghraib prison ‘scandal’ was plastered all over our (and the world’s) televisions for weeks on end … and it still merits mention now and then, when a ‘homegrown enemy’ seeks to paint the American conscience with the same brush stroke as the mindset of those who seek our destruction, and who value human life only to the degree that it suits their purposes or furthers their agenda.

Some of the most recent such ‘homegrown enemy’ utterances have come from Cindy Sheehan, in an address she gave at San Francisco State University:

'America has been killing people on this continent since it was started.'

'The biggest terrorist is George W. Bush.'

'The U.S. government a morally repugnant system.'

In just the past couple of weeks alone, Harry Belafonte, Jane Fonda, and Dick Gregory have echoed the same ludicrous types of accusations, and worse. Multiply those three leftist Hollywood types by several hundred. And then multiply that by the number of mindless followers such glib celebrities impress and you have an idea of the number of Americans who believe this country is every bit as evil as those who would destroy us.

The American republic isn’t without warts. Far from it. But our Christian roots, and Judeo/Christian view of life (yes, I happily plead guilty to unbridled, America-centric political incorrectness) places the American belief in the sanctity of life at odds with much of the rest of the world. And, falling prey to the efforts of our enemies within by allowing ourselves to be convinced that we are just as ruthless as our enemies, will prove deadly. It will dilute our vigilance. It will promote the ‘we are the world’ mindset that believes that all men are good, if only we are willing to sit at the same table with them, and treat them with dignity and respect.

The ‘greatest generation’ learned that significant lesson the hard way. And, by virtue of their integrity, courage, sense of duty, and love of country, they emerged victorious over power-hungry barbarians.

Now, six decades later, the power-hungry barbarians are wearing a new face, and are no longer concentrated in fairly easily definable areas on the globe. Some of them even live among us, in terrorist cells throughout the country. So, in some ways, we need to be more wary, more suspicious, and more vigilant than our heroes of the ‘40s were … because we are under attack on so many more fronts.

We must recognize that ‘their’ (our foreign and home-grown enemies’) assessment of the value of life is diametrically opposed to ours. And we must realize that they are forever attempting to camouflage that fact by either hiding or disguising their beliefs, or by deliberately distorting ours. If we don’t acknowledge that distinction, we will downplay the need for vigilance, and we will ultimately fail in our responsibility to step forward and fill the shoes of ‘the greatest generation’.

Reflecting on that distinction may prove uncomfortable.

Not doing so threatens our very survival.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: domesticenemies; foreignenemies; freeperjoanief; greatraid; joanief; moviereviews; nationalsecurity; thegreatraid
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I had to post this excellent essay by Freeper Joanie-f. Not only for the great review of the movie "The Great Rad" which I now plan to see...but more importantly for the eloquent remarks about our nation and the lessons we must retain if we are to preserve our liberty and way of life, and if we are to ultimately survive as a people and as a culture.

Please consider printing this out to read, ponder, and consider...and to pass on to your loved ones, friends and neighbors.

This is one of the reasons FR is so great, for this type of thinking and the discussion and dialog that it affords us, too stimulate us and educate us about our Republic and our liberty.

1 posted on 08/14/2005 6:57:08 PM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: joanie-f; Dukie; Squantos; JohnHuang2; RobFromGa; k.trujillo; Travis McGee; jim macomber; ...

FYI... a great read. Informative, thought provoking. Please take the time, when you can, to read and respond.


2 posted on 08/14/2005 6:58:26 PM PDT by Jeff Head (www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
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To: joanie-f; Landru

Joanie is a beautiful and eloquent writer. She rocks!


3 posted on 08/14/2005 7:02:01 PM PDT by Happygal (liberalism - a narrow tribal outlook largely founded on class prejudice)
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To: Jeff Head

Great post! Thank you.


4 posted on 08/14/2005 7:05:37 PM PDT by Vor Lady (Mr. Pitt, Mr. Idol called, he wants his hair back!)
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To: texas_mrs

Bump


5 posted on 08/14/2005 7:12:28 PM PDT by texas_mrs
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To: Jeff Head; joanie-f

I can't wait to see it. One thing though, my 11 year old wants to see it badly also. He's mature for 11 (his mom's a freeper!), but would this be too intense?


6 posted on 08/14/2005 7:18:18 PM PDT by oprahstheantichrist (...or false prophet at the very least.)
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To: Jeff Head

Great post. I plan to see the movie some time this month.


7 posted on 08/14/2005 7:19:40 PM PDT by ConservativeStatement
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To: Grannyx4

Thank you...I just posted it, address joanie-f and thank her. She wrote it.


8 posted on 08/14/2005 7:22:26 PM PDT by Jeff Head (www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
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To: oprahstheantichrist

I haven't seen it yet so I will have to leave it to Joanie to answer your question.


9 posted on 08/14/2005 7:23:04 PM PDT by Jeff Head (www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
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To: Jeff Head
It is the story of what is said to be the most successful rescue mission in the history of the American military. It beautifully details how the 6th Ranger Battalion (comprised of an elite group of 121 men), accompanied by a large group of Filipino guerrillas, traveled thirty miles by foot, behind enemy lines (which numbered nearly 30,000 Japanese), in order to rescue the 511 remaining survivors of the Bataan Death March.

Word had come back that the Japanese were torturing and brutally murdering American POWs rather than housing them until the end of the war. The plan was to rescue those survivors who represented the mere five percent who endured the unprecedented, sadistically barbaric Bataan march, and then three additional indescribably brutal, gruesome, macabre years in Camp Cabanatuan in the Philippines.

Miraculously, 523 Japanese troops were killed or wounded during the raid, yet only two Americans and twenty-one Filipino guerillas were killed in the mission, with two dying afterwards of their wounds.

The "Anti War" crowd who pats themselves on the back for their 'moral superiority' can never ever imagine or admit that not only are there some things worth going to war over....or that only moral reprobates hide from this fact and are in essence far worse than ordinary cowards..

Evil triumphs when 'good men' do nothing...but evil prevails when men refuse to fight because they say they are above such things..of course they lie..the truth is..they are cowards who live in the shadow of men who are willing to fight, to kill, to die, if necessary to defend, to rescue, to go to war that others might live..that others might be free..

It is a shame ..that our public school system does not honor such heroes and hold them up to our children..that they might learn who our real heroes are..and at what cost our freedom has been won for us..

10 posted on 08/14/2005 7:34:27 PM PDT by joesnuffy (Save the whales. Redeem them for valuable prizes.)
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To: Jeff Head
I heard talk radio host Michael Medved giving this movie great reviews and I was planning on seeing it this weekend, but found it is not yet playing in my area. :-(
11 posted on 08/14/2005 7:36:53 PM PDT by Spunky ("Everyone has a freedom of choice, but not of consequences.")
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To: Jeff Head

dare not foget... foget? is that french?


12 posted on 08/14/2005 7:37:29 PM PDT by isom35
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To: Jeff Head; joanie-f
"Not doing so threatens our very survival."

Well, if this isn't a wake-up call, I don't know what is.

If America goes, centuries will pass before the civilized world will be ready to be jump-started again -- to rise from the ashes of utter chaos.

Time is short and much has to be done to avert such a profound failure, the failure of mankind to keep pace with its spiritual potential. IMO.

Might sound trite, but that's exactly how I see it.

13 posted on 08/14/2005 7:39:12 PM PDT by Eastbound
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To: Jeff Head
I had also heard Laura Ingraham giving it great reviews and she had on the director. She was reading him some of the HORRIBLE REVIEWS that the critics were giving the movie.

I have learned to go to the movies that the critics say are awful.

14 posted on 08/14/2005 7:39:27 PM PDT by Spunky ("Everyone has a freedom of choice, but not of consequences.")
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To: Jeff Head
I saw The Great Raid yesterday.

The theater was nearly full and I was just about the only person there younger than 80 years old. The audiance reacted similarly to what was described in the article. Nearly everyone stayed throughout the credits, there was cheering and clapping during the rescue and complete silence when exiting the theater. Lots of tears.

A really wonderful film.

15 posted on 08/14/2005 7:39:37 PM PDT by pjd
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To: Jeff Head; joanie-f
Thank you for the ping Jeff. Beautifully written Joanie.

"The Great Raid" is one of the very few movies I will see this year.

16 posted on 08/14/2005 7:41:38 PM PDT by Diva Betsy Ross (Code pink stinks!)
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To: Jeff Head

The greatest rescue operation since Moses ..... now if Hollywood wants a real 'screamer' then do a movie on Grenada and Grand Anse ..... RLTW!!


17 posted on 08/14/2005 7:45:34 PM PDT by Yasotay
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To: joesnuffy

OUr nation was formed by great thinkers who were inspired...it has been preserved by the blood of those willing to fight to preserve it.


18 posted on 08/14/2005 7:48:29 PM PDT by Jeff Head (www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
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To: isom35

Nope...it's a simple typo. My bad.


19 posted on 08/14/2005 7:48:56 PM PDT by Jeff Head (www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
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To: Jeff Head

The PC crowd will go nuts over the way the Japanese Army was depicted as brutal, torturing murders, which is exactly what they were.

History revisionists are pulling their hair out!


20 posted on 08/14/2005 7:53:08 PM PDT by Rebelbase ("Run Hillary Run" bumper stickers. Liberals place on rear bumper, conservatives put on front bumper)
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